Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Leave it to House Republicans to turn an
accomplished executive making $520K a year into an underdog.

After they forced out House Speaker John Boehner, who
refused to shut down the government over funding for Planned Parenthood,
conservatives turned their fire on the nonprofit’s president Cecile Richards.
By attacking her personally, they made her an instant celebrity, a champion of
high quality health care for poor women, and a hero to many.

The government now has a lifeline until Dec. 11 and Planned
Parenthood is still providing health care services with federal reimbursements.
As for Richards, her marathon performance Tuesday before the House Oversight
and Government Reform Committee showed why she earns the big bucks.

Bullied for more than five hours, she didn’t cave,
get flustered or lash out. She calmly defended her organization. She kept her
cool.

Which is more than you can say for members of
Congress. They were as emotional as she was composed. Republicans were
antagonistic and rude, Democrats apologetic and shocked, shocked.

But when Rep. John Duncan, R-Tenn., asked Richards
if she should be treated differently than male witnesses who often face tough
questioning, she responded in a flash:

“Absolutely not. That’s not how my mama raised me.”

Richards, 57, the daughter of the late Texas Gov.
Ann Richards, is no stranger to toxic Washington. She worked years ago as a
deputy staff director for House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi. President of Planned Parenthood Federation of America since 2006,
she has said, “We aim to be the largest kick-butt political organization.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said
trying to “defund” Planned Parenthood is an “exercise in futility” with
President Obama in the White House. For House Republicans, though, Planned
Parenthood may be the new Obamacare – an object of disgust to be flogged and voted
against repeatedly.

Rep. Martha Roby,
R-Ala., led a symbolic effort to end funding Wednesday as the House passed the
continuing resolution to keep the government open.

“I believe we have to
fight until the very end,” she said.

Several committees are putting Planned Parenthood under
a microscope, and Boehner agreed to create a select committee to investigate the
nonprofit similar to the House Select Committee on Benghazi.

Republicans have battled Planned Parenthood for
decades. It provides 327,000 abortions annually, and its separate political arm
aids Democratic candidates.

In July, an undercover sting video surfaced,
purporting to show Planned Parenthood officials cavalierly negotiating the sale
of fetal tissue for research and discussing procedures to ensure intact fetal organs.
Other disturbing videos followed.

Planned Parenthood says the videos were heavily and
deceptively edited, and it denies any wrongdoing. Richards insisted that no federal
funds are used for abortions except in the rare circumstances allowed under the
law and that Planned Parenthood donates a small amount of fetal tissue to
research in two states at the cost of its expenses.

About 2.7 million women and men a year, many of them
low income, go to Planned Parenthood clinics for cancer screenings, birth
control, tests and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases and other
services.

Planned Parenthood receives $450 million annually in
federal funds -- $390 million in Medicaid reimbursements for services provided,
less than $1 million in child health and Medicare funds and $60 million from
the National Family Planning Program, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget
Office reported.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Brandishing poll numbers that still show him leading
the Republican presidential pack, Donald Trump said in South Carolina Wednesday,
“If we could call for the election tomorrow…Let’s do it! Do it tomorrow!”

In his dreams.

You can’t blame Trump for wanting the voting over already.
The Trump surge was the story of the
summer, but there are signs it may have peaked. He still leads in the polls but
isn’t gaining. His last debate performance was just OK. There are empty seats
at some of his events. He’s thin-skinned about Fox News and conservative
pundits. He bristles at questions about details of his plans.

Time is on the side of those who are waiting for Trump
to self-destruct. His campaign of cuts – Carly Fiorina’s face, Hillary
Clinton’s shrillness, Marco Rubio’s sweat – is bound to wear thin.

Democrats just hope he keeps talking. Every minute the
media covers Trump or Pope Francis or anything else is time not spent on the troubles
facing Hillary Clinton -- her own sinking poll numbers, the emails, trust, women,
Bernie Sanders and maybe Joe Biden.

In a new book titled
“Unlikeable – The Problem with Hillary,” former New York Times Magazine editor
Ed Klein says Clinton suffers with headaches, insomnia and depression. A
Clinton spokesman said Klein’s claims are bogus.

Our much-maligned, seemingly endless presidential
campaign season does work: It gives candidates plenty of rope. In four months – only four -- voters will start
having their say. The dates could change, but the Iowa caucuses are now set for
Feb. 1 and the New Hampshire primary Feb. 9.

A disadvantage of the long campaign is the tight
focus on the horse race. We know that poll numbers are not predictive; they’re
a snapshot. But they’re news.

Trump may be a natural at campaigning, but even hot
air balloons eventually come down. Yes, some mainstream Republicans fear that he
could be a latter-day Barry Goldwater, who captured the Republican presidential
nomination in 1964 only to lose 44 states that November. But he also could be a
Rick Perry in 2011 or Rudy Giuliani in 2007.

In September 2011, Texas Gov. Rick Perry was leading
in the Republican presidential race. Four years earlier, former New York City mayor
Rudy Giuliani looked unstoppable.

Each election cycle is different, so we can’t rely
on past performance as a guide.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush looked strong
early, but he may be a Bush too far. The outsiders – Trump, retired pediatric
neurosurgeon Ben Carson and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Fiorina – are big now, but
will voters really choose another president who lacks experience governing?

The two 2016 Republican candidates who have left the
stage – former Gov. Perry and Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin – actually had
governing experience, a liability in this year of the anti-politician.

Perry probably thought the statute of limitations
had run out on his gaffe during a debate in November 2011 when he could not
remember the third federal agency he would eliminate as president. It hadn’t.

Walker’s star faded as Trump’s rose. At 47, Walker could
run again. He made his departure seem ordained.

“I believe that I am being called to lead by helping
to clear the field,” he told reporters. “I encourage other Republican
presidential candidates to consider doing the same so that voters can focus on
a limited number of candidates who can offer a positive, conservative
alternative to the current front-runner.”

No one else seems so inclined. A Muslim civil liberties
group urged Carson to give up his quest after he said that no Muslim should
serve as president. He says he’s now raising money so fast it’s hard to handle
it all. Carson since has retreated, saying he could support a Muslim president
who put the Constitution before religion and rejected Sharia law.

The other GOP hopefuls are current and former
governors and senators, able politicians who in most years would be contenders.
Today they’re barely registering in the polls. But they’re hanging on, waiting and
hoping that Trump’s train loses steam.

The winnowing process has started and likely will
last a while. We’ll all be better for the long, arduous, annoying way we choose
our nominees for president. I’m just glad the election isn’t tomorrow.

That was a big laugh line 30 years ago. The former
actor actually had become president, and everybody knew that funny man Jerry
Lewis was unsuited to be vice president.

Those were the blissful days before Donald Trump. We’ll
consider his comic possibilities another time.

Today, many young people don’t even know that Reagan
was an actor. Jerry Lewis, though, remains one of the most durable entertainers
of the last century. Among his movie hits: “The Nutty Professor,” “The Errand
Boy” and “The Bell Boy.”

The guy’s a survivor, literally. He has weathered two
heart attacks, prostate cancer, diabetes and other health problems.

At 89, he’s still working, performing on stage and on
screen. He plays Nicolas Cage’s dad in an upcoming crime thriller movie, “The
Trust,” and recently signed on to appear in a National Lampoon flick, “Dead
Serious.” He was the lead in “Max Rose,” a 2013 dramatic film. Critics say his stage
show these days verges on the insulting, and they haven’t warmed to the serious
Lewis.

No matter. The Library of Congress announced Monday that
it will preserve Lewis’ comedic contributions to American life in perpetuity. It
has acquired more than 1,000 items -- films, TV clips and paper documents -- spanning
Lewis’ career of more than 70 years.

“This collection will give the world a more complete
picture of his life as a performer, director, producer, writer, recording
artist, author, educator and philanthropist,” said James Billington, the Librarian
of Congress.

The Jerry Lewis Collection includes films of TV and
nightclub appearances with and without Dean Martin, home movies, 34-mm prints
of his films and movie test footage. It will be in good company. The library
has collections of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, Bob Hope and Groucho Marx.

Collections are stored
and preserved at the library’s Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation in
Culpeper, Va. To celebrate, Lewis will perform Oct. 9 at “An Evening with Jerry
Lewis,” a ticketed show at the State Theatre in Culpeper.

Lewis still loves to perform. “If I get more than
three people in a room, I do a number,” he said in a statement, adding, “Knowing
that the Library of Congress was interested in acquiring my life’s work was one
of the biggest thrills of my life.”

Lewis met Dean Martin in the 1940s when both were
performing separately in Atlantic City. They formed a duo club act in which
Martin sang and Lewis interrupted with silly remarks. They became “the most
popular duo in cinema” in the 1950s, according to the “Historical Dictionary of
the Eisenhower Era,” which says that before the two went their separate ways in
1956, they had 17 comedy box office hits. Martin died in 1995.

Everybody doesn’t love Lewis – except for the
French, who may be his biggest fans.

The
French government gave “the French people’s favorite clown” the Legion of Honor
medal on his 80th birthday. Lewis went tie-less, wore slippers and hammed
it up with “a virtual slapstick routine,” the Associated Press reported.

In this country, though, he alienated about half the
population in 1998 when he said that women can’t be funny. A woman comic sets him back, he said.

“I think of her as a
producing machine that brings babies into the world,” he said. He and his first
wife had six sons before he divorced her. Lewis later
said women could be funny – but not if they were crude.

Lewis and Martin hosted the 1956 Muscular Dystrophy
Association telethon, and for the next 55 years Lewis volunteered as the event’s
national chairman, raising nearly $2 billion. The association announced the
telethon’s end in May.

To us, Lewis may seem silly and dated, but Americans
still desperately need a laugh. Even the Founding Fathers recognized the power
of laughter.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

“Loitering allowed,” the sign outside The Floyd Country Store in Southwest Virginia reads, and
that’s good because nobody is going anywhere.

It’s 4 p.m. on a Friday, 45 minutes until tickets
for the store’s Friday Night Jamboree go on sale at $5 a pop, and people are itching
to get in line. Every porch chair is taken. Inside, people sit in worn wooden booths,
eating sandwiches, ice cream and slabs of carrot cake. Others fill paper bags
with hard candy from barrels and browse bluegrass CDs, goat milk lotions and Carhartt
work pants.

Floyd, population 432, on the Blue Ridge plateau about
an hour’s drive southwest of Roanoke, may have just one stop light but it’s a
major venue on the Crooked Road, Virginia’s musical heritage trail. On Friday
nights and other times a week, Floyd blossoms with bluegrass and old-time
music.

“Floyd on Friday nights is transcendent,” said my
friend Mary, who made the trip from Pennsylvania to Floyd last year. I was
skeptical, but Mary was right.

Something extraordinary is happening in Floyd and
other out-of-the-way places as the world beats a path to see people play
traditional tunes on instruments they love. Appalachian music, crafts and
outdoor recreation are helping to build a new, creative economy in a region
that no longer can depend on coal, furniture and textiles.

“This is a place where there’s indigenous music
alive in just about every community,” said Jack Hinshelwood, executive director
of the Crooked Road, a 330-mile route from Rocky Mount to Breaks Interstate
Park with eight other major venues, including the Birthplace of Country Music
in Bristol, and 60 affiliated festivals and venues.

The Crooked Road was
incorporated a decade ago to support tourism and economic development around
the region’s musical traditions. A sister operation, Round the Mountain,
supports crafts. Local, federal and state officials, including Gov. Terry
McAuliffe, and business leaders are scheduled to speak Sept. 21 and 22 in
Abingdon at a conference aimed at celebrating the creative economy.

Tennessee, North
Carolina and Kentucky also have strong musical traditions. In Alabama, the
Muscle Shoals area is called the Hit Making Capital of the World and in May the
birthplace of W.C. Handy, Father of the Blues, in Florence received a marker on
the Mississippi Blues Trail.

I met Hinshelwood at a Thursday night open bluegrass
jam session at Heartwood artisan gateway in Abingdon. The non-profit center opened four years ago to showcase regional crafts,
foods and wines, including home-smoked meats, and music. An accomplished bluegrass musician himself, Hinshelwood explained that
most players on the Crooked Road never had formal music lessons and most have
day jobs.

“This is a place where music by and large is recreational
and cultural. It’s not about people who make their living from music. It’s very
much about a recreational way of life,” he said.

Rarely have I seen shows where the musicians and the
audience have such good clean fun. The Floyd store operates on “Granny’s
rules”—no smoking, no drinking alcohol, no bad language and no conduct
unbecoming a lady or gentleman.

At 6:30, the evening begins with a prayer and gospel
bluegrass. Recently, Janet Turner & Friends – among them her daughter Leona
– played for the gospel hour. Turner, who is from Floyd, is a tiny
woman with a froth of white hair and a strong voice. Her Facebook page – yes,
she has one – says she has been playing bluegrass music more than 30
years.

Everyone
sat quietly on folding chairs until 7:30, when the Friday Night
Old Time Band took the stage. Little kids, their parents, grandparents, couples
and singles practically ran to fill the wood floor, all flat-foot dancing,
some with taps on their shoes, some barefoot. A third band, 2 Young 2
Old, kept the crowd on its feet until 10:30 p.m.

In fine weather,
fiddlers, guitarists, banjo and mandolin players spill onto the streets of
Floyd, playing impromptu concerts on street corners and alleys.

A highlight of the evening is seeing who has
traveled farthest. A pull-down map magically appears and Stewart Scales, who
teaches geography at Virginia Tech and plays banjo with Turner, determines the
winner. The other night, a young man from Paris – France, not Texas – edged out
contenders from England and Wales. It’s not unheard of for travelers from China
to find their way to Floyd.

Along the Crooked Road, musicians jam in barber
shops, cafes, grocery stores and festivals. Free Midday Mountain Music performances
take place every afternoon on the breezeway at the Blue Ridge Music Center on
the Blue Ridge Parkway near Galax. Nationally known bands play in the
amphitheater.

The center’s Roots of American Music Museum, whose
exhibits were curated by the late folklorist Joe Wilson, author of “A Guide to
the Crooked Road,” includes historic audio and video clips and is first class. The
center is open May through October.

Several veteran pickers entertained on the breezeway
the other day, links in a musical chain that began years and years ago.

“You rosin the bow the same way and play the same
tunes your great-great granddaddy played,” Hinshelwood said. “In this
fast-paced world, there’s something anchoring about that.”

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

As Americans enjoy the Labor Day weekend, some workers
also dream of labor-free days – also known as retirement.

Republican presidential hopeful John Kasich, 63, is
not among them.

“What do you do?” Kasich, the governor of Ohio,
asked a man at Dunkin’ Donuts.

“Well, I’m retired,” the man said.

“OK, but what are you doing?” pressed Kasich, who recounted
the conversation at a town hall Aug. 19 in Salem, N.H.

“He may have recently retired, because he says he’s
now working for his wife, taking care of things around the house,” Kasich said.
“But we should never retire, never.”

We are put on this earth for a purpose, Kasich said,
and we should use our gifts to make a better world.

That’s lofty, but there’s also a down-to-earth public
policy question: When should Americans in the future retire and collect Social
Security benefits? Social Republicans and Democrats in the 2016 presidential
contest disagree.

Kasich and other GOP candidates are betting that younger
workers will willingly wait longer than their parents and grandparents for their
labor-free years -- if they’re convinced they’ll actually receive benefits.
Most young people now think they’ll never see a dime.

Democrats contend that raising the retirement age is
an unnecessary, back-door benefit cut. Some even say it’s time to expand Social
Security benefits.

The split illustrates a shift in Americans’ attitudes
toward retirement. Healthier as they age, people seem increasingly resistant to
putting their feet up – or to admitting they’d like to. Many can’t afford to
quit working, others fear too much leisure time and a few are blessed with work
they love. It helps to be the boss.

Former President Jimmy Carter, 90, said he and his
wife, Rosalynn, talked several times over the years about pulling back from the
Carter Center.Not until he received a diagnosis of brain cancer after having surgery
for liver cancer did Carter turn over the reins to his grandson, Jason.

Carter still hopes to
go to Nepal to build houses with Habitat for Humanity in November, if his
treatment schedule allows, he said last month.

Garrison Keillor, 73, announced (again) that he will
retire from “A Prairie Home Companion.” Keillor has
said for years he wanted to step back from the radio show he started in 1974. He said in 2011 he would retire in 2013, but didn’t.

This time, though, Keillor
said his last show as host would be in July 2016 and named a successor,
musician Chris Thile.

“I have a lot of other things that I want to do,”
Keillor told the Associated Press in July. “I mean, nobody retires anymore.
Writers never retire.”

After nearly 40 years in Congress, Sen. Barbara
Mikulski of Maryland decided not to run for re-election in 2016. Mikulski, 79,
said: “Do I spend my time raising more money or, do I spend my time raising
hell?”

Ms. Magazine founder Gloria Steinem, 81, has the
same idea. She continues working to promote social justice and equality.

“The idea of retiring is as foreign to me as the
idea of hunting,” Steinem says.

People can collect Social Security at 62, and most
do so, even though they would get larger benefits if they waited until the full
retirement age of 66 for those born between 1943 and 1954. Those who can delay
receiving benefits until 70 get the largest checks.

For those born in 1960 or
later, full retirement age is 67.

Nearly all the GOP presidential candidates say
people in the future should work longer.

“We need to look over the horizon and begin to phase
in, over an extended period of time, going from 65 to 68 or 70,” to save Social
Security for those under age 40, Jeb Bush said on “Face the Nation” in
May.

Chris Christie proposes to raise early retirement to
age 64 and full retirement to 69. Rand Paul says retirement should start at 70.
Carly Fiorina, Lindsey Graham, Marco Rubio, Rick Santorum and Scott Walker all favor
hiking the retirement age.

Democratic contenders Bernie Sanders and Martin
O’Malley both want to keep the retirement age where it is. Hillary Clinton has
said we shouldn’t “mess” with Social Security but hasn’t given details.

Any permanent fix of the Social Security system
likely will include raising the retirement age in the future. Your presidential
vote in 2016 may help determine how long young workers wait for benefits.
Whether you’re still laboring or labor-free, speak up.